VOL. 1, Issue 7

June 2022

Scottish Rite

The Ashlar

Valley of Columbus, Orient of Georgia

Serving Scottish Rite Masons in the Chattahoochee Valley

Personal Representative's Message


Joseph F. Oelgoetz

32° KCCH

colpr@gascottishrite.org

Personal Representative

to the SGIG


Brethren,


I first want to congratulate our newest 32nd Degree Brethren of the Scottish Rite, Valley of Columbus. We held our Spring Reunion Friday, May 20th, and Saturday May 21st. We welcome Brothers Matthew Charles Burgess, 32; Kurt Patrick Eldridge, 32; James Kevin Harbuck, 32; Anthony Michael Laymon-Jones, 32; James Matt Lindsey, 32; Thomas Clark Stephenson, 32; Timothy Lynn Watson, Jr., 32; and Jesse Travis Wilson, 32. Eight men and True. We welcome each and every one of them into our midst, into our shared Journey “East”.


I also want to take this time to thank those of our brethren who took part in an excellent Reunion. Thanks go to Illustrious John Ohrt, 33 for his guidance to all as our Director of Work. A special thanks go to Brother John Adams, KSA and his team for their work in the kitchen and providing refreshment throughout the Reunion. To Brother William Knight, KSA for his handling of the communication of those Degrees that were not exemplified. To those numerous Brethren who took part in a Degree. I especially want to recognize Illustrious Brother Paul Wells, 33 for his exemplification as the Venerable Master in the 14th Degree, a role he has done for many years with grace and excellence. To so many other Brethren who took roles and performed those roles wonderfully. And to the brethren who served on the Stage Crew – Honorable Brother Harry Ross, 32 KCCH and his team. Thank you to all for giving our new Masters of the Royal Secret a grand weekend that marked their start of their journey as Scottish Rite Masons.


I ask that you consider attending our next Lodge of Perfection (Friday, June 17th) meeting where you will see our new Brethren receive their Caps and Rings. This is a family event, so spouses/significant others and children are welcome. We will also be presenting three scholarship checks from the Scottish Rite Foundation of Georgia to worthy collegians. All three have accepted our invitation to attend, along with their families. Finally, we will be entertained by members of the Danial Morgan Camp of the Heroes of ’76 with a history of the

Flags that have flown over our great country. We are honored to have as a guest speaker, Brigadier General Andrew C. Hilmes, Director of Army Safety and Commander. And we will be honored to have as a special guest, Our Sovereign Grand Inspector General of the Orient of Georgia, Illustrious Ted Collins, 33. It will prove to be an exciting evening.


I want to speak to, over the next four Ashlar newsletters, the four cardinal virtues: Courage, Temperance, Justice, and Wisdom. Marcus Aurelius called them the “touchstones of goodness”.


The word “cardinal” comes from the Latin cardo, or hinge. They are pivotal that a good life, an honorable life hangs on. Thus, the four cardinal virtues of Courage, Temperance, Justice, and Wisdom are guideposts for one to live by.


Let us begin with “Courage”. I am writing this piece over Memorial Day weekend. Courage, in its highest manner, we honor those who paid the ultimate price of our Freedom from Tyranny throughout our Country’s history. What comes to mind is a letter that President Abraham Lincoln wrote to Lydia Parker Bixby, a widow in Boston, Massachusetts, who had recently lost five sons:….


”I feel how weak and fruitless must be any words of mine which should attempt to beguile you from the grief of a loss so overwhelming. But I cannot refrain from tendering to you the consolation that may be found in the thanks of the Republic they died to save. I pray that our Heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement, and leave only the cherished memory of the loved and lost, and the solemn pride that must be yours to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of Freedom…”


Throughout our Nation’s history, many in the face of death, exemplified that virtue of Courage. During this, and all, Memorial Days we honor those men and women who paid that last full measure of devotion. Their deaths were the heavy price of freedom and liberty. During your prayers ask the Grand Architect of the Universe that they may be at peace in that Celestial Lodge above, in that House not made with hands, eternal in the Heavens. And to grant to those that are left behind peace and courage to continue forward in life, and in dealing with their incredible grief. Courage, in the face of certain death, is to be honored.


Aristotle recognized courage as the virtue at the mean between rashness and cowardice. Courage requires moderation. Courage is a virtue when we choose to do good, especially in the face of a difficult situations, such as when one fights for an opinion that is in the right, but also in the minority. Courage is standing up for one’s values, especially during difficult times, or when temptation rears its ugly head. Courage most demands our respect when it incurs risk without selfish motivation. Courage is moral strength in the face of danger.


I pray that we all choose Courage when it is called upon to do good in this world.


Warmest Fraternal Regards, Joe


Joseph F. Oelgoetz III, 32° KCCH

Personal Representative to the

Sovereign Grand Inspector General of the

Orient of Georgia


Scottish Rite, Valley of Columbus, Spring Reunion

Friday & Saturday, 20-21 May 2022

Spring Class
Brothers Matthew Charles Burgess, 32°; Thomas Clark Stephenson, 32°; Kurt Patrick Eldridge, 32°; Jesse Travis Wilson, 32°; James Matt Lindsey, 32°; Anthony Michael Laymon-Jones, 32°; James Kevin Harbuck, 32°; and Timothy Lynn Watson, Jr., 32°.
Leadership
Illustrious Doyle R. Hatfield, 33°; Illustrious Philip Harris, 33°; Honorable Brother Joseph F. Oelgoetz III, 32° KCCH; Illustrious John Ohrt, 33°; Illustrious Paul Wells, 33°.

300th Celebration Silver Coin

300th Anniversary Coin commemorating the first constituted Grand Lodge from 1717-2017. 1 oz .999 Fine Silver Masonic coin. [One side stamped with Square and Compass and Genesis 1-3. Other Side with Appendant Bodies of masonry and coin sequence Number]. Each are serial number stamped 1-150. Can ask for specific number and availability but requires coordination with Bayardo Reyes at colsm@gascottishrite.org.

Key Notes from the Valley

Scottish Rite Valley of Columbus - 2022 Officers

Lodge of Perfection

  • Venerable Master Torrey Knight, 32o, KCCH

  • Senior Warden Baron Conklin, 32o, KCCH

  • Junior Warden Roger Buterbaugh, 32o, KCCH

  • Master of Ceremonies Rossi Ross, 32o, KCCH

  • Expert Bob Lyon, 32o, KCCH

  • Assistant Expert Ditmar Chavez, 32o, KCCH

  • Captain of the Host Russell Ward, 32o

  • Prelate Dennis Buchanan, 32o

  • Tyler Scott Lavelle, 32o

Chapter Knights Rose Croix

  • Wise Master John Ohrt, 33o

  • Senior Warden Rossie Ross, 32o, KCCH

  • Junior Warden Bill Block, 32o, KCCH

  • Master of Ceremonies Scott Lavelle, 32o

  • Expert Torrey Knight, 32o, KCCH

  • Standard Bearer Jonas Barlow, 32o

  • Guardian of the Temple Larry Cox, 32o, KCCH

  • Tyler Richard Luna, 32o

Council of Kadosh

  • Commander Bob Lyon, 32o, KCCH

  • 1st Lt Commander Tony McCool, 32o, KCCH

  • 2d Lt Commander Ed Lynch, 32o, KCCH

  • Chancellor Harold Culpepper, 32o, KCCH

  • Master of Ceremonies Ron Provencher, 32o, KCCH

  • Tercopiller Jonas Barlow, 32o

  • Draper Bayardo Reyes, 32o

  • Junior Deacon Bill Buffton, 32o, KCCH

  • Bearer of the Black Stand Mark Stillwell, 32o

  • Bearer of the White Stand Brian Pierce, 32o

  • Lt of the Guard Jacob Robideaux, 32o

Consistory

  • Master of Kadosh Sidney Cooley, 32o, KCCH

  • Prior Roger Buterbaugh, 32o, KCCH

  • Preceptor Harry Ross, 32o, KCCH

  • Chancellor Russell Ward, 32o

  • Minister of State Bayardo Reyes, 32o

  • Prelate Phillip Jones, 32o

  • Master of Ceremonies Torrey Knight, 32o, KCCH

  • Expert Ed Lynch, 32o, KCCH

  • Assistant Expert Tony McCool, 32o, KCCH

  • Captain of the Guard Matthew Dewinter, 32o

  • Steward John Adams, 32o

General Secretary

Comments

Brethren,

We had a very successful Spring Reunion May 20-21. We now have eight new Scottish Rite Masons - Matthew Burgess, Kurt Eldridge, James Harbuck, Anthony Laymon-Jones, James Lindsey, Thomas Stephenson, Timothy Watson, Jr., and Jesse Wilson. Join me in welcoming our new Scottish Rite Masons into the Valley of Columbus. Special kudos go to Illustrious Brother John Ohrt, our Director of Work; the Degree Team Captains; and the Brethren who portrayed the degrees. Your hard work made this a memorable learning experience for our new Masons. I would be remiss if I didn't recognize Brother Will Knight. A new Scottish Rite Mason himself, he volunteered to give the library presentations between the degree portrayals. I was impressed by how much this new Scottish Rite Mason knew about the craft and how he answered the candidates' questions.

Our next meeting will be June 17. We will present Caps and Rings to our new Scottish Rite Masons, present scholarship checks to three college students from the Scottish Rite Foundation of Georgia Scholarship Fund, and will have a special Flag Day program presented by the Daniel Morgan Camp, Heroes of 76. We are now in summer attire so wear your Scottish Rite polo instead of coat and tie. I hope to see you at our next meeting.


Fraternally yours,


Roger Buterbaugh, 32° KCCH

General Secretary

Valley of Columbus

Roger Buterbaugh, 32° KCCH



Jonas Barlow, 32°

KSA Commander

Valley of Columbus


Knights of St. Andrew

Brother Knights,


Received from the Knights of St. Andrew, Valley of Augusta. With the cancellation of the 2022 Knights of St. Andrew International Gathering, the KSA, Valley of Columbus would like to propose the following:


50th Annual Stone Mountain Highland Games

October 14th-16th, 2022


Stone Mountain Park

1000 Robert E. Lee Blvd

Stone Mountain, Georgia 30083


There are many different ticketing options. For those interested, we would recommend visiting Stone Mountain Highland Games for more details. A brief breakdown of the weekend is as follows:


Friday | October 14th

Whisky Seminar and Tasting, 2:30 P.M.

@Hilton Atlanta Northeast [$40.00 per person]


Saturday | October 15th

Stone Mountain Highland Games, 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.

@Stone Mountain Park [$22.50-$25.00 per person]


Scottish Evening Ceilidh, 8:00 P.M.

@Hilton Atlanta Northeast [$10.00 per person]


Sunday | October 16th

Stone Mountain Highland Games, 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.

@Stone Mountain Park [$22.50-$25.00 per person]


Events attended can be mixed and matched; no one is required to attend any of the above activities. A recommended agenda for the weekend might be to only attend Saturday's functions. We could even look into holding a K.S.A. Festive Board in lieu of the Ceilidh for Saturday evening (if there's enough interest).


What say you, fellow Knights and Brethren? Is it not high time that our various Chapters meet together and get to know one another? While the Knights of each Valley might wear the tartan of their specific Chapter, we would be meeting under the banner of our Orient—one cohesive group. Let this be a first step in continued future cooperation.

Editor - The Ashlar

Comments

Dear Brethren,

Having and expressing gratitude is such an important and health endeavor for the human race. According to Psychology Today (2022), “Gratitude is a spontaneous feeling but, increasingly, research demonstrates its value as a practice—that is, making conscious efforts to count one’s blessings.” Despite all the bad or evil in the world today, there are so many things we can be grateful for. Sadly, it seems that at times, it is too easy to focus on the negative while taking advantage of the positive things in our lives. We must make a conscious effort to be grateful for the things we can control and the lessons we learn from the things we cannot. But why is gratitude so important? “Psychologists find that, over time, feeling grateful boosts happiness and fosters both physical and psychological health, even among those already struggling with mental health problems. Studies show that practicing gratitude curbs the use of words expressing negative emotions and shifts inner attention away from such negative emotions as resentment and envy, minimizing the possibility of ruminating, which is a hallmark of depression” (Psychology Today, 2022).

A conscious effort to be mindful of negative behavior is so important because our brain is always listening. When we talk negative, we think negative, but it does not have to be that way. We can reverse this cycle through gratitude and cause the opposite effect. I have found that gratitude not only changes us as a person but also the way our brain thinks. That is because when we exercise gratitude, we are thinking and acting positively. Gratitude further helps us to break away from toxic emotions that make us feel down, angry, or depressed. In fact, even if you do not share it with others, the act of reflecting upon gratitude in turn helps to minimize negative thoughts we might otherwise experience from the same situation or event. Then, over time we begin to think less negatively which will have a more lasting effect on our brains. According to the Greater Good Science Center at the University of California, Berkeley, Mind & Body (2022), studies show that when people feel more grateful, their brain activity shows "greater neural sensitivity in the medial prefrontal cortex, a brain area associated with learning and decision making.” I ask that each of you take a moment to find something to be grateful for and commit to improving our overall quality of life through acts gratefulness.

Of course, there are many things I am grateful for but with Memorial Day having just passed, I would be remiss not to mention my gratitude for the men and women we have lost in the defense of our great nation. Brotherhood is the bonding between human beings and exists of course on different levels and in different spheres of human experience. Soldiers belong to a very unique band of Brotherhood with ample evidence of bonding on the battlefield. Many of us have known those who have made the ultimate sacrifice. Men and women who gave their lives in the hope for a better tomorrow. On 30 May 2022, we remembered the family members, friends, and comrades we lost along the way. Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness can exact a heavy toll and there is no loss on the battlefield more devastating than the loss of a Soldier while fulfilling their duty.

Originally known as Decoration Day in the years following the Civil War, today, known as Memorial Day is about them. It is up to those of us left behind to remember our Brothers we lost on the battlefield. For me, I remember PFC Jacob S. Fletcher, 28 years old from Bay Shore, New York and SGT Joseph Minucci II, 23 years old from Richeyville, Pennsylvania, C-2/503rd 173rd Airborne Brigade, who died on 13 November 2003 by Hostile fire following an Improvised Explosive Devise attack in Samarra, Iraq. Sadly, I could list many more losses spanning my military career and yet still experience the loss of friends and former comrades even today.

Remember the men and women who gave it all for those who live on today. Honor their sacrifice by being grateful for the lives that have been given by that sacrifice and let us also be grateful to still be on the journey.

Rest in peace Brothers!

Cameron Davis, 32°

Sincerely and Fraternally,


Cameron Jay Davis, 32°

Director of Knowledge Management & Communication

Editor - The Ashlar

Valley of Columbus

College of Freemasonry

The next SML is: Thursday, 9 June 2022 at 14:30 EST.

Solomon’s Masonic Learning (SML)

Solomon's Masonic Learning (SML) is a virtual learning environment developed by the Solomon Lodge Education Committee to assist the Master with instructing the Brethren in all areas of Masonic education. Using the Zoom platform, the Education Committee will coordinate and schedule Masonic learning presentations and when available, guest speakers to present in a virtual setting.

Visit www.sml822.com to see the latest and past SML events. If you do not already receive notifications, you can subscribe to the sml822 email distribution list and receive email notifications surrounding events and Masonic education information HERE.

The Measure of a Man

The Measure of a Man (Star Trek: The Next Generation).

Written by Melinda M. Snodgrass and directed by Robert Scheerer (13 Feb. 1989), excerpt from season 2, episode 9. Watch the full episode HERE.

The Connection between Data and Freemasonry

Written by Bro. Cameron Davis with description of "Data" from Wikipedia

What! A Star Trek video for Masoning Learning? If you will allow me to express the science fiction (sci-fi) geek within me, Star Trek: The Next Generation (season 2, episode 9) The Measure of a Man is one of my all-time favorite Star Trek episodes. You may not believe it, but Star Trek is packed with one moral lesson after another if you are willing to extract a deeper meaning. In the show, the character "Data" is a synthetic life form with artificial intelligence. He is a self-aware, sapient, sentient and anatomically fully functional male android who serves as the second officer and chief operations officer aboard the Federation starship USS Enterprise-D and later the USS Enterprise-E. His positronic brain allows him impressive computational capabilities. In the early years of his life, he experienced ongoing difficulties with understanding various aspects of human behavior and was unable to feel emotion or understand certain human idiosyncrasies which inspired him to strive for his own humanity. This goal eventually led to the addition of an "emotion chip" allowing Data to feel emotions. Although Data's endeavor to increase his humanity and desire for human emotional experience is a significant plot point (and source of humor) throughout the series, he consistently shows a nuanced sense of wisdom, sensitivity, and curiosity, garnering respect from his peers and colleagues. In this episode, cyberneticist Commander Bruce Maddox receives permission to disassemble Data to determine how he functions. However, when Data expresses doubts about Maddox's likelihood of success, he refuses to undergo the procedure and resigns his commission. Data soon finds himself in the center of a judicial inquiry to determine if he is just a machine and a piece of property or a sentient being who has the right to make his own decisions. (Wikipedia)

The character "Data", even as a sci-fi android is an inspiration to humanity. His character reminds us to always activate an inter-drive by fully grasp equality which allow us to grow mentally and spiritually. As Masons, we are all first in the dark and slowly gain Light, one golden ray at a time. While filled with moral lessons, the Star Trek episode The Measure of a Man truly focuses on the characteristics that make him a man and his right to live and grow among humanity. Essentially, it focuses on the equality of life and to some extent, offers a new perspective of how “life” is defined. As a Candidate for Freemasonry, we were all in a state of helpless indigence who were properly prepared to receive the startling truth that in the Lodge all men are equal, meeting on the level and parting on the square. The semantics of the word “equal” however can cause a bit of confusion. Equality is first inculcated into our core belief with the initial prayer we experience in Lodge. We were directed to kneel for the benefit of prayer to invoke the aid of the Deity at which time the Chaplain recites the words - “Endue him with such a competency of Thy Divine Wisdom, that assisted by the secrets of our Masonic art, he may the better unfold the beauties of true Godliness to the honour and glory of thy Holy Name.”

Equality in Masonry (in my opinion) is often misunderstood or misrepresented in that we fail to apply its full context. I have often heard Brethren express (as I did earlier) that we are all equal in Masonry. I do not disagree to a point but argue that it is much more. What I mean, is that we are all equally Brothers but, equality in a Masonic context does not mean that we are all “equal”. The level teaches us to meet “as equals” in a context of mutual and equal respect. A point of equality emphasizing that no man is greater or better than another, but not in a meaning that no man can achieve greatness beyond another. To me, it also means we all have an equal opportunity to grow, develop, and learn if we simply take the initiative to do so. Therefore, we have an equal responsibility to our own development and can blame no one if we fail to progress. An Entered Apprentice, Fellowcraft, or Master Mason who fails to allocate time to prepare for proficiency stunts his own growth.

Furthermore, while the Master of the Lodge may meet with the Brethren as an equal, his duties grant him far greater authority over the Lodge than others. Therefore, in this context we cannot say he is “equal”. None in Masonry could argue the Grand Master’s authority supersedes all other individual voices in the Grand Lodge, nor the fact that he has significantly more responsibility. The Grand Master is a Brother and always meets, acts, and parts equally as every other Brother, but he is not “equal”, he is the Grand Master. Nonetheless, every Brother is afforded the same equal opportunities as those afforded to the Grand Master which allow us all to grow in Freemasonry.

So, just as Data is fighting for the equal opportunity to live and grow, we learn that achieving true Masonic equality rest more with the individual and his inter-drive to grow both mentally and spiritually. The measure of a man is then in part measured by his individual effort to exercise true equality in all aspects and nature of the word.

The Measure of a Man.

Presented by: The Educator - VWB Norman McEvoy (11 August 2016) Source

There is no denying that men are often judged by the amount of worldly wealth they have amassed. We hear of a man described as a poor man; a rich man; a man of substance or property; a man of means or comfortably off. Quite often the measure of a man’s success in life is the measure of his material possessions.

Deep set in the heart of every man, there is an acquisitive instinct which compels him not only to surround himself with things which he regards as valuable, but also to defend the objects he has acquired, from anyone who would seek to deprive him of them.

Man is not to be blamed for this instinct. Mother-nature has endowed him with this gift as a necessary part of his self-preservation equipment. Man is, however, to be blamed for allowing his life to be dominated by one instinct instead of subduing his primitive impulses and harmonising them into a good working team, under the leadership of sweet reason. Undue attention to the acquisitive instinct leaves a man groping blindly for satisfaction in a world of plenty. He may even gain the whole world and lose his soul.

He is also to be blamed for measuring successful living by the amount of things acquired; but it is so easy to see and touch the tangible assets. To assess in terms of quantity is mentally easy, because the message is conveyed to the mind through the senses. This is known as perceptual or sensory thinking, and is thought on its lowest plane… the kind of thinking we share with the animals. It concerns itself almost wholly with the physical life.

One of the earliest lessons in Freemasonry instructs the candidate that riches and property do not form the basis of measurement of a man’s worth. There is the frank admission that in a society so widely extended as Freemasonry, there are members of rank and affluence and there is the still franker admission that there are many members who are reduced to the lowest ebb of poverty and distress.

Charity is inculcated as of paramount importance as the cementing power of brotherhood, or that trusteeship of material wealth, which enables the fortunate brother to share without condescension or patronage the burdens of a less fortunate brother. Every brother acknowledging the common Fatherhood of man must by sheer logic answer affirmatively the question, “Am I my brother’s keeper?”

So every candidate for Freemasonry is divested of all moneys and metallic substances and is even deprived of the blessing of material light in order that he may be taught in a dramatic and symbolical manner what a good Freemason understands as the correct place in the scheme of things for worldly possessions. He learns that material wealth is incidental to living, and must indeed be regarded not only as a privilege but also a responsibility.

Henceforth as a Freemason, the gift of worldly possessions, like all other gifts must be purified and dedicated to a nobler purpose than self-aggrandisement.

He is taught in no uncertain terms that a man is not esteemed in a Freemason’s Lodge on account of his worldly possessions, for in the Lodge all men are equal. As brothers, this is obviously correct, for if there is a flaw in the logic of this tenet, then the whole system of Freemasonry would rest on a fallacy.

The only injunction regarding worldly possessions given to a man, young in Freemasonry, is that he shall dedicate himself to such pursuits as will enable him to continue respectable in his life. This is a very noble conception of the place of wealth in the scheme of life. It is to receive sufficient attention from a man, as to enable him to preserve his self-respect and hold his head up among his fellows, but is not to become a dominating and driving force in his life.

The initiate in a state of helpless indigence is properly prepared to receive the startling truth that in the Lodge all men are equal, meeting on the level and parting on the square. In the future he is to be as masonically rich as the monarch, who does not think it derogatory from his dignity to exchange the sceptre for the trowel. His equality with the brethren of the Craft the world over is explained to him in a very plain and convincing language.

It is that part of Masonic instruction, which is not veiled in allegory and illustrated by symbols.

He is received into the Lodge, held firmly in the bondage of ignorance, and I think he must very soon after his entrance be comforted and thrilled by the request the brethren make on his behalf to the G.A.O.T.U.

“Endue him with such a competency of Thy Divine Wisdom, that assisted by the secrets of our Masonic art, he may the better unfold the beauties of true Godliness to the honour and glory of thy Holy Name.”

Here in one powerful supplication is the revelation to the candidate of the source of our equality, the store house of the wealth which the brethren are willing to share with him, and the purpose for which this new wealth is to be used.

Here he comes face to face with Masonic truth. There is a transference of emphasis from things material and temporal, to things spiritual and eternal. He finds that a man’s worth will be measured by the quality of his spiritual and mental worth. He has been received into a society of men, who prize truth, honour and virtue above the advantages of rank and fortune. No longer is the quantitative analysis important. The qualitative aspect has superseded it. Material things no longer count. Ideals take precedence and we have man’s motive taken to the higher plane of conceptual or constructive thinking, which is the differentiation between man and beast. It is that power which was given to man when he was made in the likeness of the Great Architect and it is for a full competency of that Divine spark which we supplicate.

The most important aspect of his entry into Freemasonry is that membership alone is not sufficient. It is not the brethren who will ensure for the candidate the blessing of a full and useful life. This task is left to the candidate himself. The wealth of a noble mind is not presented gratis to the candidate merely because he has joined.

Only the way is opened for him. The Personal Spiritual Journey.

He must do the travelling himself. In the supplication the words” that he may the better unfold” are significant. Indeed, he is told that the initiation ceremony is but the foundation on which he himself must build his own superstructure perfect in its parts and honourable to the builder. He has qualified by a general desire for knowledge, and by a sincere wish founded on worthy motives to be ranked among the members, and he has been well and worthily recommended as a fit man to participate in the richness of Masonic experience… but the task of attaining to that richness and fullness of life, is left almost entirely with him.

Freemasonry will assist him, but the effort remains as an individual one.

So we find in the ritual, instructions which are the last word in directness. The new brother is left in no doubt whatever, as to how the effort is to be made. He cannot at the end of any ceremony feel bewildered as to what is expected of him. The demands on his effort are unmistakable, direct and final. They are unequivocal.

First and foremost he is to use the V.O.S.L. not keep it as an ornament. He must regulate his actions by its divine precepts. Thus he can always know whether his effort to become rich, is proceeding according to the plan of unerring truth and justice. He is not told to understand or contemplate the moral, social, civic and domestic virtues, but actively to practice them.

So strong are the instructions that at one point he is told to be exemplary in the discharge of his duties…not merely faithfully obedient, but so active in interpreting the spirit of the law, that his conduct besides being correct is an example to others. He must keep his emotional life under control by following rigorously a prudent and well-regulated course of discipline, such as to preserve his mental and physical faculties in their fullest energies so that he can exert the talents with which he has been blessed.

He must keep within the length of his cable tow by making quite sure that none of his actions overstep the boundaries set down by the four cardinal virtues of Prudence, Temperance, Fortitude and Justice. He is to value education for its own sake….as a polish or adornment to the life of the spirit enabling him to delve more deeply into the hidden stores of rich and happy human experience. He is to study such of the liberal arts and sciences as fall within the compass of his attainments.

And so, one might go on showing, not only from the first, but also from the second and third degrees, examples of plain demands made by the Craft on a brother who would attain the great and valuable privilege of true Masonic living.

So many and so great are the efforts demanded that even in the first degree a man might be pardoned for thinking that the task set is beyond him. Were we gifted with a mortal life seven times the allotted span of three score and ten, we could never measure up to the Masonic ideal.

Herein lies the great strength of Freemasonry. The possibilities are unlimited. It is for each one of us to decide how far he will make his own the treasures of character which Freemasonry offers us. We enter the Craft of our own free will and accord, as free men, and we remain free.

At no time does Freemasonry reduce us to servitude to an institution. The exercise of free will is never taken from us. Each must decide for himself how great his effort will be, but each must also realize that his attainment will always be commensurate with his effort.

In the last analysis it is to the G.A.O.T.U. that we must measure up. The quantitative results of our earthly striving will remain behind. We cannot take them with us. We shall stand in the Grand Lodge above still in a state of helpless indigence, but we shall take with us the qualitative result of our earthly striving. As the spirit has grown, so will it stand for judgement. He will be a happy Craftsman who, on rendering an account of his stewardship in the Grand Lodge above, receives that highest of all commendations,

“Well done, true and faithful servant.”

Committee Reports

College of Freemasonry

The next Master Craftsman meeting will be 6pm on 29 June 2022 at the Scottish Rite Center. Please Read chapter 3-4. We will go over any thought provoking questions. Hopefully in the near future of the Master Craftsman program our newly joined Brothers of the Scottish Rite of Columbus during the Spring Reunion will be joining us soon.

Philanthropy/RiteCare

Please visit the RiteCare Page.

Knowledge Management & Communications (KMC)

In the last 30 days, the Ashlar has received 45 direct engagements with a 51.72% engagement rate. This includes 371 different events between page views, first time visitors, page scrolls and more spanning across the United States and Germany. The highest number of page views were to the Homepage with 89 direct views. In the Month of May, the Valley also sent 2 official emails using our group email distribution which reached 54.2% of our membership with 36.1% reading the Memorial Day Tribute.

Also, many thanks to the hard work of Bro. Bayardo Reyes, we now have our 100th year anniversary logo.

Valley Membership Achievement Project (VMAP)

We are into the 6th Month of the year 2022. With all of the current year events that has been completed. I anticipate we are continuing our course of action for sustainment and improvement for the rest of the 2022 year.

Vol. 1, No. 7 - Jun 2022